American Thought Leaders - How Rampant Explicit Material Is Poisoning the Minds of America’s Children | Kristen Jenson
Episode Date: April 17, 2026“Pornography is like a silent epidemic ... but nobody wants to talk about it much,” says child protection advocate Kristen Jenson.She’s the author of the “Good Pictures Bad Pictures” series ...of read-aloud books that teach children how to recognize and reject pornography.In America, kids are encountering porn at younger and younger ages—often without their parents knowing, Jenson says. Once a child has a smartphone, it is only a matter of time until the child is exposed to porn—often by other children. And it’s having a devastating impact on their impressionable young minds, Jenson says.“Every school bus in America is a triple X theater because children are showing pornography to other children in buses. I’ve heard so many stories of five-year-olds getting shown hardcore pornography on a school bus,” she says.Retroactive studies found that the average age kids first view pornography is around 11 years old, but Jenson concluded from her work and research that the average age is much lower.In our in-depth interview, she walks me through many aspects of porn consumption and how children are impacted by it: How does porn affect children’s overall development and their chances of meaningful sexual relationships later on in life? How does porn affect children’s mental health? How does it affect their sexual health? Do children get addicted to porn? How are girls impacted by porn? How do sexual predators use porn as a grooming tool for kids?Violent porn, in particular, is a huge problem in itself, Jenson said. By the age of 18, the vast majority of teenagers—about 80 percent—have been exposed to violent porn: “That’s the main fare out there. It’s violent porn. It’s hitting, it’s slapping, hair-pulling, strangling.”Many children’s perception of sex is poisoned by violent pornography. She told me a story of a girl who was kissed by her 12-year-old boyfriend for the first time: “And he strangled her because that’s what he'd seen in porn.”It is perhaps unsurprising then that there has been a steep increase in what is called child-on-child sexual abuse over the last decade. In fact, about 70 percent of all sexual child abuse cases are now child-on-child, she said: “Kids love to imitate. When you add in the factor of pornography ... it is not surprising that some of these children want to go ahead and act out what they see in pornography,” Jenson says.So what should parents do to protect their children?Simply telling your children that porn is bad is not good enough, she said. Children need to be given three basic things: a vocabulary to talk about pornography, a warning against it, and a plan of what to do when they are exposed to it.To help parents in this endeavor, she wrote her book series “Good Pictures, Bad Pictures.” These books, geared to different age groups, are meant as a tool to help parents with such conversations: “The point is to model parents talking to their children. It’s really important to open that conversation.”“One of the most loving things that you can do for your child is to give them a defense against not only pornography, but all forms of sexual exploitation,” she says.Views expressed in this video are opinions of the host and the guest, and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Epoch Times.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Child-on-child sexual abuse has skyrocketed.
It's fueled by pornography.
Kids are swimming in a sea of sexualized media.
In this episode, I sit down with Kristen Jensen,
founder of Defend Young Minds,
and author of the best-selling book series,
Good Pictures, Bad Pictures,
that educates children on the dangers of pornography.
What does pornography actually do to young minds,
and how can we protect children in an age of
where many will encounter it before they're even 10 years old.
Children who know how to reject pornography and why are safer from an actual hands-on predator.
This is American Thought Leaders, and I'm Jania Kellogg.
Kristen Jensen, such a pleasure to have you on American Thought Leaders.
Thank you, Jan. It's great to be with you.
It's been my contention for a while that this ubiquitous use of
pornography in our society is a huge, I know, a destructive force in the social fabric and
specifically around children because of the availability of the internet, basically on every
screen, practically. And this is the thing that you know most about, but explain to me the scope
of this problem. Well, the scope is huge. Children are viewing pornography. They have so much
access because they have devices that are connected to the internet, they have apps, social media,
and they're stumbling onto content. And the port industry is not just sitting there waiting
for kids to show up. They are actively pursuing them because if they can get them hooked,
then of course, you know, they've got lifelong members or lifelong, you know,
people that are going to be watching and viewing and paying for premium subscriptions,
etc.
Pornography really hurts children.
You know, back in the 60s, Rachel Carson wrote a book called Silent Spring in which
she said, look, this DDT is affecting the young, the little tadpoles and the eggs and the eggshells
and all these things affecting the young.
And that's when we know we have a crisis.
And we have a public health crisis.
Pornography is a public health crisis
because it is affecting our children.
But nobody seems to want to talk about it much, right?
I don't say, I shouldn't say nobody,
but, you know, it's something we don't really want to admit
how much pornography is harming and hurting
our children in so many ways.
Well, let's, so let's dive into that.
Like, can you give me a sense of the scale?
I mean, there must be some numbers out there
on how many kids are affected,
what ages they're starting to look at,
girls and boys.
Right. Yeah.
So let's talk about the age.
You know, what age,
what's the average age that kids view pornography?
When you look at retrospective studies,
they come up with 11, 12, 13 years old.
And these retrospective studies are done because you can't go into 100, you know, elementary schools
and say, we're going to talk to the kindergartners through the sixth graders and ask them if they've seen porn.
So we're not able to do that.
We're only able to ask older teens and young adults, you know, when did you see pornography?
And the reason you don't ask just to be clear is because you're kind of introducing it to them that way?
Yeah, I don't think you'd get permission.
There's an ethical, you know.
Yes, of course.
So to set up the gold standard study would be difficult.
So they do retrospective studies.
So one study in Jakarta said that of the fourth to six graders that they were able to talk to,
97% of them had seen pornography.
When you look at Common Sense Media Study, they say 15% of kids under 10 had seen pornography.
I think whenever you give a child a device, like a smartphone, pretty much that's when they're going to start seeing porn.
And kids are getting these devices younger and younger.
And I believe that the average age is much younger than 11.
So that's one part of it.
When you think about a child and their development, their normal natural development,
pornography is really going to negatively impact their cognitive development,
their studies that show that kids have cognitive issues,
kids that frequently look at pornography have cognitive delays almost.
It affects their mental health.
And we could talk a long time about the mental health issues, but there are many studies that show that children who look at pornography have higher rates of depression, anxiety, suicide, lower self-esteem, you know.
And we're seeing so much of this across the board, so much more depression, so much more anxiety in kids.
body image issues, premature sexualization, which leads to riskier and earlier sexual activity.
Well, let's talk about that because I read a statistic, which I found just absolutely horrifying.
I'm sure you know it, I'll get you to tell me, but just that a lot more of the sexual abuse that's happening right now is children doing it to each other.
And I just, I don't even want to think about that.
But explain that to me.
Yeah, well, child-on-child sexual abuse,
and sometimes it's called child-on-child problematic behavior,
has skyrocketed.
So when I first started talking about this issue,
it was at 40%.
And I thought that was really bad.
Just wait, 40% of all child abuse?
40% of all reported child abuse cases
were perpetrated.
by minors by other children.
That's been the case in the past?
You're saying it's higher than that?
It's now 70. 70%.
So what's happened?
You don't think about that.
I mean, we think about child abuse.
We think of it happening and we know it's often adults
that are related to the families and so forth.
We never think about the children doing it to each other.
Right.
And it used to be some family member, you know,
that is the person.
predator. And that's still the case when there is an adult predator. It's usually someone known
by the child. However, it has become children on children. That is the majority of the cases,
and it's fueled by pornography. Let's just kind of break this down a little bit. This is just
every aspect of thinking about this is absolutely horrifying. But it's not that probably most of these
kids aren't predators. I mean, this is, let me state a few assumptions. I don't
know the issue at all, but they're not, are they just acting out what they saw in the films,
or, you know, or are some of them being turned into these predators? Like, what's happening?
So let's talk a little bit about the brain of a child. Children are imitative, right? That's how
they grow up into adults, right? They imitate. Any parent knows this. They see their child
imitating them, imitating how they talk, what they do. Kids love to imitate. But when you add in
the factor of pornography, now they are seeing pornography. It is not surprising that some of these
children want to go ahead and act out what they see in pornography. And we're seeing that more
and more and more.
So when I got started writing good pictures, bad pictures, the reason I got started doing it
was because of a young man, 17-year-old, who was sexually molesting his younger brothers and
sisters, from the 14-year-old down to the 4-year-old.
And pornography was involved in all of that.
And so I talked to him like six years later, and he told me that, you know, he'd
gone into, in his state, there was a training, there was a program, treatment program.
So he was in this treatment program with eight other boys.
Now one of them had a hands-on predator or perpetrator, right?
They had not been sexually abused by a person.
It was porn.
Porn was a perpetrator that got them then to act out on their siblings or cousins or other
more vulnerable children.
And that was years ago.
So we see this over and over and over again where children, imitative, right, view pornography, act out on other children.
And one woman in my area actually contacted me, and she told me how she was, during one summer, she was watching a 10-year-old boy in the neighborhood.
because his mother, single mother, had to work.
And, you know, most of the summer was going by.
Everything was fine.
He was playing well with her kids.
And then one day he took the seven-year-old daughter, her seven-year-old daughter,
into the bathroom, shut the door, and started to try to do sexual things with her.
So this mother obviously found out and called the boy's mother.
and I told her what happened, and she broke down and crying and said,
three weeks ago I found that my son was watching porn on the iPad.
And so all the wrong, he's fine, and then he starts watching porn, and then this happens.
Now, you know, I can't say, you know, yes, this caused this.
But I have so many stories like this.
And you speak to anyone that's in, for example, the people that are helping kids that act,
out sexually on other kids. They all will talk about pornography privately, right? No one seems
to want to talk about it out in the open. Why? I don't know. I don't know. I would like
to know that because I also have gone to child abuse, you know, prevention conferences
and you don't hear a lot about pornography on the stage from their presenters, but if you talk
to them in private, they will tell you, oh, yeah, yeah, pornography is definitely a factor
here, definitely a driver. I don't know why.
So this comports with my own kind of thoughts about this, which are not terribly educated.
It's just my sort of observation from having talked to lots of people.
I suspect that a lot of adults are watching porn, and they don't want to admit it because
it's shameful, obviously. But it's just, I've learned a bit about how addictive, many things in
our society or never mind things which are just kind of naturally, deeply addictive, like
pornography itself, right? And I suspect it's probably a large crisis in itself. And because of
people shame, and this is a hypothesis, obviously, right? Because if people shame, they don't want to,
they don't want to talk about it. That's because you tend not to want to talk about the things
you're ashamed of. I agree. But there's also this kind of idea out there that if you're
anti-porn, you're sex negative. You know, and you're kind of, you know, anti-sex. And I'm like,
I think porn is sex negative. That's horrifying. You're right. No, that makes perfect sense,
but it wouldn't have occurred to me until you said that. So somehow you have to sort of be,
you know, appreciative of it. What a mind job. Yeah. Well, I'll tell you, I have many people come
to me and say, especially men, I wish my parents had had your book.
Let's talk about it. Before you saw talking about your book. So, no, because you have written
a fascinating book. I mean, there's nothing else like it remotely that I, I mean, I looked,
right, to see good pictures, bad pictures. Tell me about the book. Yeah, so good pictures,
bad pictures. I wrote when I found, you know, this friend of mine, his son was, you know, sexually
emlusting his younger brothers and sisters. Porn was involved. So I went to look for a resource
and couldn't find anything. And I did a little more, you know, looking around on the internet.
And I just figured, you know, we can boil this down for a seven-year-old. And so I wrote good pictures,
bad pictures, the whole point is to model parents talking to their children. That's really important
to open that conversation. And then to give kids a definition of what pornography is in an age
appropriate way. So you could read this book to your children even before you've kind of started
those conversations about sex. So a definition so they can recognize it, a warning so they
understand why it's dangerous.
It's not good enough to just say,
born is bad, don't look at it, you know.
So a warning about its harms.
And in my original book, I talk a lot about how it becomes an addiction.
And then third, a plan.
So they know exactly what to do when they see it.
So a definition, a warning, and a plan,
all set in a conversation with a mother,
and a father who are open and explaining these things
to their children, because that's what I want to see.
I want to see parents doing that with their children.
And then I have another book, Good Pictures, Bad Pictures,
Junior, and parents asked me to write it for younger children,
which was a shock to me.
But every kid's on an iPad.
I mean, every three-year-old's on an iPad,
and they need to be warned as well.
I just want to comment on this, too,
because you cited two studies.
I think the one in Indonesia was four to sixth graders,
and almost everybody had seen it.
And the other one was 15% of under 10 and under.
That's still enormous, whatever that.
And there's, of course, a huge range in between that,
and maybe there's cultural differences as well.
One of the things that strikes me here is, you know,
as a parent, if you're hearing, hey, there's a book
that you're going to, you're kind of going to expose your kids
to pornography or the threat of pornography or something.
I mean, some parents might be thinking, hey, aren't I, like, going to be start to groom my kid on pornography here or something?
Right?
Like, I mean, that's a very legitimate question.
Absolutely.
And parents do fear this.
What if I start this conversation with my son or my daughter?
And then I arouse their curiosity and they go out and look.
And we, you know, there are those kids that they have to touch the hot stove, right?
I'm that kid.
You're that kid.
You know, I'll share some of my own thoughts about it after, but please continue.
Yeah.
But my argument is this.
You have two choices.
You know, one is to cross your fingers, but dread in the sand, hope your kid doesn't ever see it until maybe after you finally get the courage to start talking about it.
Or to be proactive.
And that first, you know, that first plan has not been working, not been working.
So to be proactive is to start and to open this conversation.
It gives children a vocabulary, right?
It makes you a safe person to talk about these things with.
And if you do it right, there's not going to be shame, there's not going to be judgment.
So even if your kid goes and runs out and touches a hot stove, first of all, it's still safer
because you're still opening, continuing those conversations, continuing to educate that child,
building a disposition of wanting to and knowing how to reject pornography and knowing why.
Right.
But by and large, the stories I hear are the stories that I started reading good pictures,
bad pictures to my child, and they let me know they had already seen this kind of material.
That is usually what happens, I would say.
And kids are swimming in a sea of sexualized media.
So I think it's rare when a parent is the one that initiates that curiosity,
and it's not a friend of theirs at school because, you know, kids share this stuff on their phones with other kids.
And I'm just, you know, I've been thinking about this a bit because so when I was one of these kids that had to touch the hot plate,
even if you were told the hot plate, touching the hot plate is bad, right?
And the way I was exposed to pornography was there was a video store.
They were VHS, you know, VATED of videos.
They had come out at this time.
And the store was just stupidly, you know, giving people like me,
I think I must have been like 11 or 12, whatever we wanted.
Of course, we wanted the forbidden stuff.
And this is kind of the argument, you know, someone might give you,
hey, wait a second.
Kids are just going to go for that forbidden stuff.
But my own reflection on this is knowing from the parent,
from your parent what they think about something is still actually very helpful, even if you're
still enticed into the forbidden thing in the first place.
Yes, because you are opening this conversation.
You are instilling your values about it.
You are giving your strong reasons, you know, why you don't want them to go in that direction.
And that is worth a lot because ultimately as parents, we don't have full control.
We used to have a lot more control.
But with digital devices, even if your kid doesn't have a smartphone,
the kids at school do, the neighbors do, you know,
so you can't control what your child does,
but you can influence them.
But you can do something with screens, though.
I mean, your kids can go to schools where there's no screens, for example,
or you can also restrict your kids screen use.
And that probably would play a very important role.
Wouldn't it? I mean, I'm just your thoughts.
Yeah, my thoughts on filters and parental controls and all of that.
And I think that's all very important to do.
Yes, definitely get your Wi-Fi filtered.
Definitely get, you know, the parental controls on all the devices.
I would say never give your kid a device, have a family device that they can use.
Give them access.
Don't give them a thing, right?
Because there's a different psychology there.
The important thing is that you are training them.
and you are giving them an internal filter.
Right?
So you can have all these external filters and tech filters,
and that's important.
However, once they go out the door,
even if you have everything in your house locked down,
which is still really hard because these goods are very clever.
But once you have everything locked down,
the minute they walk out the door,
there's no guarantee of any filter.
the minute they go into a public library.
Right.
There's no filter.
So at least in my state, so I think that kids need an internal filter and they need
to know why.
You're talking about morality.
You're talking about instilling morals in your children basically around these things.
Yes, good information, good information, and yes, why this will lead, if you want to have,
you know, better mental health, if you want to.
want to have a happier, more intimate, you know, sex life.
Honestly, when our kids get older, you know, we don't, most parents aren't going to say
out loud, I want my kid to have a great sex life.
But, but you do at the right time with the right person in a committed relationship,
you know, like marriage, that's what you want.
But pornography is going to poison all that.
It's going to, you know, infect the mind with these,
these toxic sexual scripts that, you know, are self-centered, that are violent, all of the things
that make a marriage beautiful and trusting, you know, and bring you closer, that's the exact
opposite of what you're going to see and be taught in pornography. And the violence is horrible.
So one study showed that by the time kids were 18, you know, and they seemed to be.
porn, 79% had seen violent porn. I mean, that's the main fare out there is violent porn. It's hitting,
it's slapping, hair pulling, strangling. Story about a girl that finally, you know, she got a kiss
from her boyfriend at the age of 12 and he strangled her because that's what he'd seen in porn.
And, you know, how is it the kids are going to grow up?
up and be able to have happy, healthy relationships when their view of sex is so poisoned by
pornography. It's so performative. It's commodified. It's objectification.
Of course.
So. And so easy to stumble upon. I mean, I had this actually happened to me. I was at an event
where there was someone speaking about their, I think it was actually they were going to run for
political office and they shared their website, right? It was, it was actually, happened to be
a woman shared her website. And I looked at, I had my iPad and I looked it up, except somehow I wrote
the wrong link. And suddenly there was hardcore pornography playing on my iPad, which I was, you know,
I was kind of like cradling to hoping no one would notice. But it just, it really hit me that,
that this is, this is how they pray on people. I mean, never mind, just never children, adults, right?
Like, I mean, because it's, there's a weird kind of enticing thing about it. Yeah. Right. Like,
It's kind of you have to make a very conscious decision to say, no, this is not something I want.
And you have to have good reasons. So someone just says, oh, it's bad. You know, it doesn't explain
how harmful it can be to you, right, that can become an addiction. Let's talk about the brain
chemistry. Okay. What happens? Yeah. Because this is, this is, this ties into the addiction piece.
Well, in good pictures, bad pictures, porn profiting today's young kids is where I lay out how
pornography actually becomes an addiction. So a seven-year-old can understand it. So they find that
things that are drugs, right, what happens is it affects the dopamine in the brain. And so
dopamine is going to come over a neuron. There's a synapse and it's going to be thrown over
to the other synapse. On this synapse, there are these like little mitts. They're catching the
dopamine, right? But when you have a super stimulus, like a drug, right, or pornography,
even gambling, you know, that is pushing so much dopamine over that neural connection,
the brain is like, ah, too much dopamine, and it starts to shut down those receptors.
Well, now what happens?
You've got to, now you're not getting that response.
And that's pleasure, right?
Dopamine is sort of essential.
It's the seeking part of it.
It's the seeking part of the pleasure.
So what happens is your mood comes down.
And you need the fix to get it.
Right.
You have to up the ante, right?
So the next time you go and use your drug,
you're going to use more.
or something more potent, right?
With drinking, you might start with a beer
and end up with vodka, you know, that kind of thing.
Or you, with pornography,
might start with something pretty tame,
but then that's not doing it for you
because dopamine.
And that process is the same in the brain.
And especially if you're using,
anything that you're using to escape
from like a negative emotional state
actually drives addiction.
addiction even stronger, even more.
So children will get into pornography many times
to distract themselves from the negative things
that are happening.
So addiction, really it's the same process.
Whether you're taking a drug or you're using a behavior,
it's really the same process in the brain.
They've shown this, like they've done MRI studies
in Germany and in the UK, at prestigious universities,
where they show, for example, they bring in people
that are using pornography compulsively, heavy users,
and they show, for example, that their prefrontal cortex has shrunk.
The shrinkage of this part of the brain
is noted in all kinds of addictions.
It's also noted in behavioral addictions like pornography.
The thing is, is that pornography use can become compulsive.
Some people don't want to say addicting,
but the outcome is the same.
You have to have it and you have to have more of it
to just keep a baseline.
I think the fact that pornography is addictive
than the research that I've read is pretty well established.
I think we can say it's addictive.
Okay, I think it's addictive.
No, it's absolutely addictive.
There are people that still argue that, oh no, maybe it's not.
Why are they arguing this?
Because the porn industry is funding,
a lot of studies trying to show that it's just entertainment, it's no problem at all.
I mean, look at the, you know, back when tobacco, right, it took 7,000 studies before we finally,
the government finally says, yeah, it's probably causing lung cancer.
The thing is, is when you do a study and, you know, people that don't want to say it's an addiction,
they'll say, well, this is just a correlation.
It's not causation, you know.
correlation. Well, you get so many correlation studies and you do a study where the more you use,
the more your brain is shrunk, that looks causal to me. So we are getting more and more studies
about the harms of pornography. And there's also the sexual dysfunction aspect, right? And then there's
also the horrifying thought about, you know, someone who hasn't gone through puberty or is,
you know, how does that even work? Yeah. So if you
start looking at pornography at a young age, the studies show that you are going to have a much
higher risk for mental health problems, mental health, like greater levels of depression and
anxiety and suicide, lower self-worth and all of those things. So it's really important to
protect young children. But as far as like in their future, it really can, you know, it really
can impact their future.
And you mentioned sexual dysfunction.
So there's this thing called porn-induced erectile dysfunction.
And what happens is the brain gets so topped out
on viewing pornography and maybe even fetishes, certain kinds, you know,
that when they're with, you know, a real person,
they cannot become sexually aroused.
It just has stopped working and is a form of ED.
What they find is that if they stop looking at pornography,
then and stop using it, you know,
then they recover.
I just want to comment here.
I like how you talk about this.
Your user.
You're a user of pornography.
It's not just like you're watching a show or something like that.
No, you're a user.
Well, you're using it to, you know, to get that pleasure,
to get that arousal.
and it works.
I mean, it works in the short term.
The problem is with everything that's addicting.
In the short term, you know, having that drink might help you deal with a short term problem.
But, you know, my dad was an alcoholic and, you know, it really, you know, ruined his life.
So pornography in the same way ruins people.
marriages, it can ruin their job opportunities, it can ruin their families.
And so it is something, and I can't tell you how many people as adults come to me and said,
I was shown pornography at seven, I was shown pornography at five, and I felt compelled to keep
looking for it and looking for it. So children are being
horribly hurt by pornography and yet it just is being normalized. And what I want to say is,
this is not normal. Children should be protected. We should have better laws in place, obviously.
But until we do, you know, we need to start giving kids a defense against pornography
so that they can grow up healthy and have healthy relationships.
The other thing that just struck me we didn't talk about, again, I was shocked to discuss.
I sort of assumed it was more a boys' issue, but it's not just a boys' issue.
So tell me about that.
So one survey I recently looked at was 44% of women look at pornography.
Pornhub, if you want to believe them, they say 39% of visitors are women.
But I don't think they're taking into account all of the porn that.
is read. Women tend to get into porn through reading because they're very relationship.
Like kind of extreme romance novels or something? Yes. So they're very relationship oriented.
So they'll read spicy, you know, romance, but, you know, just outright. Like the hundred,
hundred shades of gray? Was that the film? Fifty shades of gray. Fifty shades of gray. There were three of them,
and that was a huge success. But that was the idea. That's what you're
talking about that kind of it's sort of a weird SMM yeah it starts light yeah and I think
you have talked to Anna Lemke the dopamine nation absolutely I keep thinking about
her work as we're just talking about speaking here yeah she yeah she tells about her
own story of getting hooked on reading these kinds of books on her Kindle and
having to realize that this was becoming an addiction just like she treated in
other people. And she had to pull back because it was really affecting their life. So yes, girls
receive deep wounds from pornography and they're more ashamed because we have this cultural
myth that, oh, girls, you know, aren't interested in sex. Let me tell you they are. And,
but when they see the violent porn, I mean, the violence is, is mostly, you know, aimed at them,
Right?
Aimed at women.
And the most disgusting, degrading kinds of acts that are happening to women, this is just
common, common, common.
And so, yes, when women see that, and then it normalizes it.
So, well, that must just be normal.
That must be what I can expect.
You know, girls aren't even, you know, they're being abused, sexually abused.
Not realizing that that's what's happening.
Yeah, because, oh, well, that's just what I see in porn.
So that's, so why are we teaching all these girls to accept sexual violence?
It's, you know, and no wonder, the studies that show women, that include women in the studies,
show that the women are even more affected, their mental health is even more negatively impacted by pornography than the men.
So that's why I wrote my Good Picture, Bad Pictures Guide for Girls.
Oh, that's one I haven't seen yet.
Yes.
It's just coming out, has a whole chapter on objectification.
It's the same format as the original, so it's a conversation, but there's a lot more kind of girl-friendly anecdotes.
We talk about these books, these books make pictures in your mind.
So it's just as powerful as, you know, watching a video.
And then we talk also.
We have advice for parents about sexting because that makes girls so vulnerable.
And yet, you know, girls feel pressured to do these kinds of things in, you know, in their teen years.
And even younger.
So, yeah, girls are vulnerable.
And sometimes girls are even more vulnerable.
boys because parents are like, well, I think I really want to make sure my boy isn't looking
at this. So maybe we'll just give him a flip phone or, you know, but I'll hand my, you know,
12-year-old or 11-year-old, a full-on smartphone, iPhone, whatever, because she'll be fine.
And she's not fine. She is not fine. So something just occurred to me, you know, looking at
our kids have, you know, screens,
we're just beginning to realize seriously
how big a problem the screens themselves are.
Yeah.
And all the non-pornography stuff that's on the screen
and the impact, I mean, it's just devastating, right?
This feels like a sort of an augmentation of the damage
or something like that that you're describing.
But there's also like just the places where people will encounter this
are places that you might not imagine.
Like I was looking at one case study,
which was, you know, the Roblox, which is like, you know, just a normal game where you build,
you can build scenarios and things like that.
And probably millions of kids are using it.
I don't know.
But you can also build really horrible scenarios, apparently.
So maybe tell me about that and just some of the different ways that might be unexpected,
that they might encounter it.
Yeah.
So anywhere there's a screen, kids can get to pornography.
And pornography can get to them.
So with Roblox, I think what parents don't always recognize is that Roblox is not just a kid's game.
It is a platform, kind of like YouTube, right, where people can build all kinds of games on there.
And many of the games on Roblox are absolutely not for kids.
They're sexual.
They're called sex condos.
And kids, you know, there's no Iron Gates, so they can get on there.
and see people being raped and all kinds of things on Roblox.
So I'd be very careful with any game where a predator also can use messaging
and can basically talk to your kid.
That's very dangerous.
I think the FBI a couple of years ago put out a warning
saying that on these video games like Roblox,
They had these professional predators basically coming in, pretending to be other kids,
identifying a victim, and then normalizing, sharing, you know, nudes,
and getting the kid to do the same.
This is grooming.
It's extortion.
Yeah.
And it's grooming, and then it can lead to extortion.
Right.
Do you sexstortion meaning you get a compromising image and then you.
And then they want money.
Now, this often happens with old.
older teens and have more disposable, more access to money.
But even getting a kid to give pictures, you know, that is a form where they are giving
pictures and then they're threatened.
So now they're going to get more.
Blackmailed into doing things.
To doing a video.
And people like these videos.
So they get kids to do them.
It's total exploitation.
And it can begin on these, you know.
video platform. So if I are a parent of a young child today, I would never let my child on a game,
no matter how much peer pressure there is, where, you know, the whole world can get at them, right?
I would put them, make sure there are games. I think Minecraft is one where you can have your own
little server and limit who is on that game. So there are some games that are much more safe. And, you know,
We have information about that on Defend Young Minds as well.
But, yeah, so access.
So games, anytime a kid is access to social media.
One study in the UK found that kids were really getting to porn through X, through Twitter.
Snapchat, messaging app has really become a full-on social media.
You know, on X on that point, this is an interesting point.
I don't know how it is now, but I had to turn on my,
there's a setting for no adult content or something.
It's problematic because there's things that you want to see
that are, you know, would be only for adults if you turn it off.
But, you know, literally looking for very non-porn things,
I would routinely, you know, get, you know,
you suddenly see something and you're, you know,
trying to frantically to get rid of it.
of it. It was kind of shocking. It hasn't happened, frankly, it hasn't happened in a while,
but I think it's because I put the setting on. Yeah. You know, and...
Which you can put the setting on, but if a kid has their own social media, like,
they can just take it off. Right, right, of course, of course. So social media,
messaging apps, anywhere there's a screen, Spotify, you know, music apps,
the treadmill, you know, a treadmill, and other children. That's why I say every school bus in a
America is a triple-X theater because children are showing pornography to other children on playgrounds and buses.
I've heard so many stories of five-year-olds getting shown hardcore pornography on a school bus.
But children, if you teach them what to do, they will respond.
And you can help them.
There was a mother that put up on Facebook that her nine-year-old,
she read him, good pictures, bad pictures.
He went to school.
Three days later, you know, somebody came up with a phone, one of his classmates,
showed him pornography.
And, you know, he recognized it, and he went home, and he told his mom.
He said, I was scared, but I knew what to do.
I was scared, but I knew what to do.
Every child deserves to know what to do when they see porn.
Because they can't just, like, it's not easy for them to deal with it if they haven't been prepared.
Can you walk through with me kind of, you know, short form as if you were reading to me the book?
Okay.
Just walk through.
I'm the kid.
You're the kid.
Okay.
All right.
Well, you know, there are good pictures like we have on our photo album or we have on our phones where we're good pictures of our vacations and time with friends, but they're also bad pictures.
Bad pictures are called pornography.
And they involve pictures, videos, even cartoons or descriptions of people with little or no clothing on.
Have you seen any of these bad pictures?
So we talk about what...
I'm going to just...
I'm going to be in character here for a moment saying.
Well, right, but we had some of those pictures from the beach the other week.
Oh, pictures of people like with swimsuits on, yes.
Hopefully the swimsuits were covering their private parts.
But in pornography, those parts are...
for everyone to see.
And we're not talking science books, right?
But we're talking pictures and videos that show
the private parts of the body.
And sometimes seeing those pictures can feel like
the pull of a giant magnet.
But there are problems when we start to look
and seek after those pictures, because it can actually hurt the brain
and hurt the way we see other
people. So it's important that we see other people as humans and not as objects. And it's also
important that we protect our brain from addiction. Because looking at pornography can become
an addiction. So then, you know, an addiction, we're going to talk about what an addiction is.
And then after I talk, after I tell you what an addiction is, I'm going to teach you about that you have two
brains. You have a thinking brain and a feeling brain and they work together, but it's really
important to keep your thinking brain in charge because it knows right from wrong and it learns
about consequences. And then after I tell you about how that works, we're going to talk about
your attraction center and how that part of your brain is really targeted by pornography.
And it can become, it's something that is always looking for something new and can become hijacked by pornography and this addictive process.
And then we're going to give you a plan.
So you know exactly what to do not only when you see it, but when those memories keep popping back up because they can be very shocking.
Yeah.
So we're going to give you a plan so you don't have to worry.
you can just use this plan to keep yourself free from the harms of pornography because most likely
someday you might see it and I just want you to know what to do and that you can come and talk
to me and that I want you to come and talk to me whenever this happens.
I have to confess that I've seen some of this and frankly it does keep replaying
in my mind.
Yeah.
And I kind of like it.
Yeah.
Well, I'm really, first of all, I'm sorry that you've had to see it.
And I can tell that it has already affected, you know, how you're thinking.
And when you say you kind of like it, let's just, maybe we need to talk about that.
I would love to hear why you like it.
And, you know, and then let's have a conversation about, you know, what that is showing.
versus what is really healthy and it's going to help you become a healthy adult who can have
healthy relationships and maybe even someday have a really wonderful marriage. So let's just talk about it
openly. I'm happy to, you know, I want to know what you're thinking about this.
See, and at this point, I think most parents are going to feel really uncomfortable talking to their
kid well let me tell you what I say I mean or the kid I don't is the kid really gonna tell
what they saw because you kind of you know just thinking back right thinking back to to
younger life you kind of knew this was forbidden stuff and you're not really supposed to
casually talking about it with your parents even though when they're being very
loving and so forth right like I'm just this is yeah did your parents talk to you about
it though no no no we didn't talk about anything like
No, no. So you had a sense. It was forbidden. You had a sense. It wasn't really appropriate for children. But you still, you know, you were so curious.
Well, I was particularly interested in those things that were that society was sort of telling you were.
The taboo.
Right. Right. Yeah. Yeah. Well, some kids are that way. A lot of kids are not, but some kids are. And I would just say,
for the kids that are that way,
I think it's even more important
to open this discussion with them.
Because, you know, you can't just say,
well, my kids, you know,
find it.
And they're just going to, you know,
you need to give them your perspective,
some education.
I totally, I completely agree with that
because it gives you, even as your,
you know, interest, you also know,
the standard or a standard
or something like that.
Well, and the harms that can come to you.
Right. Right.
The harms.
And do you want,
want, I mean, we have an article on defending my.
But kids are not going to figure this out on their own.
No.
That's for sure.
No.
That's the point, right?
So it might, it's not going to solve the problem entirely, but it's giving them a leg up.
I mean, I'm just, I'm thinking through what you're saying here because, you know, the temptation is to say, well, you know, this is, this is all fine and nice.
But kids are like, you know, they don't care about their parents.
They don't know.
But parents can have a huge influence.
I'm sure.
And the younger you start, the better and the more influence you have, right?
Because you're setting the context.
And, you know, I want to tell the story of a young man who he decided, his parents had talked to him,
and he decided that it wasn't going to be fair to his future wife if he got involved in pornography.
Because he was going to be looking at all these women,
and basically having sex with them in his mind.
And he didn't feel like that was fair.
And so, I mean, it does sound like a pretty mature child.
But he decided from the time he was in fifth or sixth grade that he wasn't going to look at it.
But that strikes me as a powerful thing to say, right, to young men that are, you know, maturing and so forth.
Because that's obviously true.
Is this going to be fair?
I think a lot of people would be like, hmm, maybe not.
Well, his friends showed him porn.
This one that was a terrible beastiality kind of thing.
It was going around all the sixth graders.
This is years ago looking at it.
And they said, you know, you've got to do this.
You've got to use porn.
You know, you've got to do this because, you know,
and they had all these, like they had reasons why they thought they should be using porn.
that somehow it had a healthy benefit.
And they were worried about him.
He goes, no, no, no, I'm good.
And he was good.
And the day that I heard that he was getting married,
I was like so happy for him and for his wife.
She was lucky.
And I think that children can be persuaded.
They can be taught.
They can be educated.
Educators call this developing a disposition.
So if you can develop a disposition,
in your child to see the problems with pornography, the harms, the many harms, the toxic sexual
scripts, and to guide them to wanting something better in their relationships.
You know, you can not have sexual intimacy if your mind, if you're using the script of porn,
porn is not about intimacy.
You know, it's just about conquest, it's just about domination.
and violence.
And so if you want happy marriage someday,
you better stay away from porn
because born's going to take you in the opposite direction.
And that's probably something that features in the new book,
the girls' book, because I think girls are much more
at an early age interested in things like marriage
and finding the perfect guy and having a good relationship
and that kind of stuff.
Yeah, we talk about that in the chapter
about these romance movies and novels and such,
that we want something,
positive and them to be able to have an intimate, you know, relationship with their spouse.
And so there's every good reason to begin these conversations with your son or daughter at an early age.
And if we don't, then we cannot get mad at them when they, if they stumble across it or,
or, you know, begin to use it or to use it even in an addictive fashion.
We have to, like, we have to open up that conversation so that they can have some kind of a
protection, a defense against it.
Are there, what is the legal, what are the legal, legal realities around this?
Is it like any kid can see anything and that's always perfectly fine from the legal
perspective or? So there are a lot of laws that are not being enforced around pornography. There's
so many obscenity laws still on the books and nobody's enforcing them. It is, in many states,
it is illegal to show pornography to a child. So there's laws, but, and there's laws against, you know,
I mean sexting. That's child porn right there.
And some kids are getting prosecuted for that.
So that's a worry.
If your kid has a device that you're paying for,
and they have images that are tantamount to child sexual abuse material,
see, Sam, guess who's responsible?
It's a person paying for that phone.
That's the adult.
So there's other motivations here.
to keep this stuff away.
Because you can easily imagine how something like this could end up.
If you're watching pornography all the time, you wouldn't even necessarily know.
Right.
But I think that another really good reason to, you know, parents buy a lot of body safety books, right?
They want children to be safe from predators.
And I will say that children who know how to reject pornography,
and why are safer from an actual hands-on predator.
A family with a six-year-old went to visit some friends for dinner.
And the toys had been stored down in the basement just temporarily,
so the kids were run down the stairs, grab a toy, and come back up.
And so this little six-year-old ran down the stairs,
he was deliberating, you know, which toy wanted.
And a man came up with a smartphone,
and showed him gay porn and started grooming him.
Well, this little boy, his mom had read him, good pictures, bad pictures.
I don't think she read it to him thinking this is going to save him from, you know, sexual abuse,
but it did because he ran up and told his mom and, you know, he had gotten out of a situation
because pornography is the number one grooming tool of predators.
That's what I was thinking as you're talking a whole time.
So if they know to like, I talked to a child advocacy center.
It's the number one.
So this is actually this has been somehow quantified that this is the number one grooming tool.
It just what I meant earlier is it strikes me as a powerful grooming tool given everything we've discussed.
What else are they going to use?
I mean, it's perfect.
You know, it normalizes children having sex.
sex, it breaks down barriers. So yeah, I would definitely say it's the number one grooming tool.
It is just, there's nothing better. And so that's what he was using. So I spoke with a woman
who's, she had a case where there was a 12-year-old girl who had been sexually abused by her stepfather
for years since she was 10.
And when she was 10, he started showing her pornography and then kind of getting her to have
sex with him.
Now, all he had to say to her was, if your mom finds out, we're both in trouble.
And that kept her silent.
At some point, though, the mom found out, right?
I asked the caseworker, if the mother had had this.
and not to blame her, but if the mother or someone had this conversation with this 10-year-old
and said, if anyone ever shows you pornography, you need to come and tell me.
What solved a whole lot of these issues.
We absolutely saved this girl from years of sexual abuse, right?
This is such an important point, actually, because if we, let's say that it's right,
It sounds right to me that pornography would be used as a grooming tool often.
The moment that people are alerting their parents or caregivers or whatever that this is happening,
that could stop a whole chain of effects, events.
But kids don't, if they don't have the vocabulary, if you haven't opened the conversation,
they're very hesitant to tell.
Well, everybody is very hesitant to talk about this stuff.
I mean, this is part of the reason why I think it's not better known.
It's not, I mean, it's hard.
We'll see what the reception to this episode is.
I'm very curious myself, but I really do believe that it's such a serious issue in our society that we aren't dealing with.
It's an epidemic.
It's like a silent epidemic.
Nobody wants to talk about it, but it's hurting children.
And you're seeing it in the mental health.
numbers, you're seeing, you know, all of that isn't just screens in social media. A lot of
is pornography. And so you're just seeing lives ruin. I mean, you may not, when you hear
someone's divorced, you may not hear why. I have so many women coming up and telling me,
I'm divorced because my husband was addicted to porn and I just couldn't handle it. After a while,
he wouldn't get help, never worked, you know, I'm out of there because I feel so betrayed.
So just.
Well, that never mind the people that are in the industry themselves, right?
Yeah.
I mean, and because there's this whole, I mean, I remember there's all these narratives about how it's all consensual and everyone's happy and all this stuff.
And it just is not like that.
That's just, I've read enough.
I know enough now that it's, it's, I mean, it's been demonstrated that that's absolutely not the case.
in fact. It's a lot of people acting out sexual trauma, you know, abuse trauma and things like that.
Yeah. So it's it's a widespread problem. But the good news is that there are tools out there now that help parents begin these protective conversations,
train their children, teach their children to avoid all of these harms because they're probably not going to be able to avoid seeing pornography.
but they can avoid, you know, just dousing their brain with it.
A final thought as we finish?
I guess one of the most loving things that you can do for your child is to help them,
is to give them a defense against not only pornography, but all forms of sexual exploitation.
It goes deep and it doesn't always get resolved.
I was flying to D.C. once and to a symposium on child-on-child, problematic sexual behavior.
The guy next to me was a pilot.
And he told me about his work and asked me about mine.
And he said, and when I told him what I was doing, he looked down, he goes,
that happened to me.
So he was abused by another child.
He says, and I'm still not over it.
I'm still not over it.
So if we can get in there early
when our children are first on the internet
and prepare a defense
so they know exactly what to do
and they're not alone
because I don't know about you
but I don't do very well when I'm caught off guard, right?
they're not alone.
We can help us sure that they're going to have a happy, healthy,
future, and potential for a happy, healthy marriage.
Well, Kristen Jensen, it's such a pleasure to have had you on.
Thank you, Jan.
Thank you all for joining Kristen Jensen and me on this episode of American Thought Leaders.
I'm your host, Janja Kelek.
Let me begin by saying thank you to everyone who's helped make my book
Killed to Order a New York Times and Publishers Weekly,
bestseller. To folks in the Southern California area, I'll be in San Diego and Irvine speaking
at two live events about what we've uncovered after more than 20 years of investigative reporting
into China's organ transplant system and how it affects each and every one of us in the free world.
I'd love to meet you in person. We'll have a live Q&A at both and I'll also be signing books after
the event. We've decided to make these events free so more people can attend, but seating is limited.
You can find all the details and reserve your seat at my website, Janjekyllic.com slash events,
or just scan this QR code here.
I hope to see you there.
